Chazen, Career Center business development specialist, 37
Phillip Todd Chazen, a business development specialist in the Career Center at Washington University in St. Louis, died Jan. 26. He was 37.
Active lifestyle associated with less Alzheimer disease-related brain change among persons with APOE ε4 genotype
A sedentary lifestyle is associated with greater
cerebral amyloid deposition, which is characteristic of Alzheimer’s
disease (AD), among cognitively normal individuals with the ε4 allele of
the apolipoprotein E (APOE) gene, according to a report published
Online First by Archives of Neurology, one of the JAMA/Archives
journals.
Editors’ picks: 2011 WUSTL news stories worth a second look
Some WUSTL news stories never get old, and some just get better with time. WUSTL news editors picked 11 stories from 2011 — some new, some old — but all worth a second look as we head into 2012.
International perspectives on 9/11 focus of Oct. 27 roundtable
“Remembering 9/11: International Scholars’ Perspectives,” is the focus of a roundtable discussion to be held at 7 p.m. Thursday Oct. 27 in the Mallinckrodt Multipurpose Room on the lower level of Mallinckrodt Center, 6445 Forsyth Boulevard, Danforth Campus of Washington University in St. Louis.
WUSTL in the News Highlights for Oct.19, 2011
Highlights include WUSTL law professor Brian Tamanaha on job market for law school graduates (U.S. News & World Report); Olin’s Carol Johanek discussing a new dog food commercial that features high-frequency noises only dogs can hear (Discovery News); and coverage of a WUSTL architecture competition that highlights the Jewish Sukkot holiday (St. Louis Post-Dispatch). More>>>
New departments, department heads in Arts & Sciences
Arts & Sciences starts the fall semester with a new program director and four new departmental chairs, two of whom are heading newly created and reorganized departments.The Department of Asian and Near Eastern Languages and Literatures (ANELL) and the programs in East Asian Studies (EAS) and Jewish and Islamic Studies (JINES) have been reorganized into two full-fledged departments.
Bodies at Play: Japan Embodied seminars resume Sept. 23
Japanese body art, elaborate tattoos, fashion and pre-modern pornography are among topics to be explored as the Department of East Asian Languages and Cultures in Arts & Sciences at Washington University in St. Louis opens its fall seminar series. The Japan Embodied: New Approaches to Japanese Studies seminar series opens at 4 p.m. Friday, Sept. 23, in Room 18, Busch Hall, on the Danforth Campus with a free, public program on body ornamentation in Japanese culture.
WUSTL film series focuses on young starlets of Japanese cinema
Frustration, friendship, struggle, joy, anguish and love are among the emotions explored by some of Japan’s most talented young actresses as the Young Starlets in Japanese Cinema film festival debuts at Washington University in St. Louis Sept. 24 through Nov. 5. Among the films being shown is Kamikaze Girls, the 2004 film from director Nakashima Tetsuya.
Death tolls spur pro-war stance, study finds
Mounting casualities in America’s nearly 10-year-old wars in Iraq and Afghanistan might seem to serve as a catalyst for people to denounce the war and demand a way out. But a Washington University in St. Louis study into the psychology of “sunk-costs” finds that highlighting casualties before asking for opinions on these wars actually sways people toward a more pro-war attitude. This sunk-cost mindset may also expain why losers stay in the stock market.
Everyday Clairvoyance: How your brain makes near-future predictions
Every day we make thousands of tiny predictions — when the bus will arrive, who is knocking on the door, whether the dropped glass will break. Now, in one of the first studies of its kind, researchers at Washington University in St. Louis are beginning to unravel the process by which the brain makes these everyday prognostications.
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